Bogus DMCA notices are unfortunately nothing new, but one recently issued to Google from Microsoft seems to go a bit further—and get a bit more absurd—than your average takedown request. This one hit sites like Wikipedia, the BBC, TechCrunch, and AMC Theaters, seemingly over the use of the number 45.

The request deals with a couple of different pieces of software, allegedly being distributed illegally at the 700-800 or so (mostly suspicious) URLs listed, but it's the section relating to the Windows 8 Beta that's worth noting. It includes items such as:

These requests to Google just remove pages from Google search, not the actual content itself. And it seems that the real giants like the BBC and Wikipedia have gotten white-listed, but this is still an interesting look at exactly how weird and wrong these automated takedown requests can get. Better be careful using numbers; some computer somewhere finds that behavior to be super sketchy. [TorrentFreak]